News Corp’s management and standards committee is carrying out internal investigations relating to Rupert Murdoch’s remaining UK papers -The Sun, The Times and The Sunday Times - and is working closely with the detectives investigating alleged phone-hacking and corrupt payments to police and other public officials.A total of 30 people have now been arrested since last July as part of Elveden, which is linked to Scotland Yard’s phone-hacking investigation Operation Weeting.

A police statement said: 'She was arrested shortly after 9am by officers from Operation Elveden, the MPS investigation into allegations of inappropriate payments to police and public officials.

Probe: Former News International employees arrested under Operation Elveden include (clockwise from top left) ex-Chief Executive Rebekah Brooks, Former News of The World editor Andy Coulson, former NoW Managing Editor Stuart Kuttner and Former Royal Reporter Clive Goodman

'The 37-year-old woman attended Bromley police station by appointment and was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to corrupt under the Prevention of Corruption Act 1906, suspicion of conspiracy to cause misconduct in a public office, contrary to common law and suspicion of bribery, contrary to the Bribery Act 2010.'The development marks the first arrest by the force’s phone-hacking squad since Rebekah Brooks and five other suspects were charged with conspiring to pervert the course of justice earlier this month.

A 50-year-old employee of HM Revenue and Customs was arrested along with a 43-year-old woman at an address in north-west London by Elveden officers that same day.A spokesman for News International declined to comment but confirmed that a company employee had been arrested.